Love is an irresistible desire to be irresistibly desired. ~Robert Frost If there ever was an area that needed to be more openly discussed among married couples, it’s this one: sex. It is easy to believe that every other couple has no difficulties with the subject. That if you and your spouse are having trouble when it comes to sex, you are the only ones. You couldn’t be further from the truth. Every couple will experience at least some difficulty in the area of sexual connection.

Dr. Amy Fuller's insight:

Dr. Corey Allen with www.simplemarriage.net explains how problems in the bedroom are most often not really problems in the bedroom, but stemming from hurt feelings, resentment, disappointment, etc. He also give 5 great practical tips for creating more passion in your relationship.

A surprisingly significant number of people in relationships aren't aware of their partner’s needs simply because they haven’t talked to them about it in the right way. It isn't that they aren't interested, but rather it's just that they don't know how to approach the conversation. The best way to open up to your partner about your lovemaking is to ask them targeted, specific questions.

John Gottman is one of the leading researchers on what makes relationships work. Building erotic love maps in a relationship can really improve the quality of the sexual relationship and take intimacy and pasion to new level.

In Tuesday’s article, Top 5 Problems With Sex Today, I mentioned that people are getting too much information from the Internet, and not enough from their partner. Getting information from the Internet is, by its nature, impersonal. When we take information gathered impersonally into intimacy we depersonalize that as well. This leaves partners feeling disconnected and lonely in the very arena that’s meant to bond them and create closeness!

Relationships and intimacy have been heavily on my mind recently. Maybe it's the heat or the fact that summer seems to be the beginning and end of many relationships, but its been a topic of much conversation between my friends and me.

In long-term relationships, we often expect our beloved to be both best friend and erotic partner. But as Esther Perel argues, good and committed sex draws on two conflicting needs: our need for security and our need for surprise.

Dr. Amy Fuller's insight:

Enlightening and refreshing view in desire in long term relationships...

The road to long-term passion starts with a surprise: intimacy requires soul-searching, not romancing. Love is an existential challenge, and the reward is a sex life that grows richer (and raunchier) with time.

Dr. Amy Fuller's insight:

This article explains how couples can sustain awesome sex over the long course of the relationships. Based on the concepts of Dr. David Schnarch, couples actually get closer by growing up and learning how to be an adult.

Consider this: In over five million years of human evolution, only one organ has come to exist for the sole purpose of providing pleasure – the clitoris. It is not required for reproduction. It doesn’t have a urethra running through it like the penis, and thus, does not urinate. Its sole function – its singular, wonderful purpose – is to make a woman feel good!!

Sadly, it is precisely because the clitoris has no function apart from female pleasure that science has neglected to study it as intricately as the penis...

Dr. Amy Fuller's insight:

Caution...this scoop isn't for the faint of heart!

Facinating new 3-D imaging of what is actually inside the female genetalia.

Ladies, if you could do one simple thing to boost your libido, would you do it? And what if it cost little or no money and required just a small amount of time and effort? And, as an added bonus, what if it improved your health and increased your energy? Would you do it? Yeah, me too!

If you’ve been married more than a couple of years, sex may sometimes seem a bit, well, boring. It’s kind of embarrassing to admit that, isn’t it, because movies, television and magazines present sex as an endless series of passionate encounters and fabulous climaxes. And really, if you’ve enjoyed passionate and fabulous sex at some point in the past, it’s hard to admit that your sex life has become a bit dull.

In his book Passionate Marriage, sex therapist Dr David Schnarch asserts that the greatest sexual pleasure in life is possible in one's middle and later years, when a mature sense of self has been achieved and genuine intimacy is possible with another person. Dr Schnarch shows how the details of your sexual style -- from kissing to daring erotic behaviors -- are a window into you, your partner, and your relationship.

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